Tracks and Traces (Reissue)

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Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 64:05

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philip sherburne

eMusic Contributor

Electronic music columnist for eMusic.com; writer for fishwrap like The Wire, XLR8R, SF Weekly, RES, Nylon, and Wired; columnist for Pitchfork; blogger (www.phi...more »

10.06.09
A member of Neu! and a member of Cluster collaborate, Brian Eno produces, experimental rock history made
Label: Gronland Records / High Wire Music / INgrooves

One of the crucial nodes in Krautrock's sprawling history, Harmonia was a collaboration between Michael Rother (one-half of motorik rockers Neu! and an early member of Kraftwerk) and Cluster's Hans Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius. They were less a band, per se, than a point of intersection for various ideas about rhythm, texture and technology that were floating around the West German experimental rock scene of the '70s. That intersection turned international when, in 1976, Brian Eno &#8212 often said to have called them the world's most important rock band &#8212 plugged in with the group in their studio in rural Forst, near Düsseldorf. It was clearly a fruitful encounter: Eno would continue to collaborate with Roedelius and Moebius (along with Asmus Tietchens and Can's Holger Czukay) for 1977's Cluster & Eno and the following year's After the Heat. But the Harmonia sessions would go unreleased for another two decades.

Adding three tracks not included on the 1997 Rykodisc reissue, the remastered 2009 edition of Tracks and Traces isn't just for Krautrock completists. Downplaying Neu!'s pulse and Can's tribal funk, the group stretches out and sinks into a mossy bed of lilting synthesizers, tapeworn effects and muted electric guitars and… read more »

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Forecast of things to come

soreEyes

this album is absolutely brilliant... inside these tracks you can almost hear other songs Eno has produced post this session, even though I feel most of the credit goes to Harmonia's innovative textures and soundscapes. I really wish I could have been a fly on the wall during this recording session.

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Get this now

AmpereLachaise

This really is a fantastic record. Artists today who may identify as post-Rock should hear this and learn.

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WoW!

dave010101

unbelieveable. This was part of the birth of what has come to be called electronica. If it had been released last week for the first time, I wouldn't have been surprised. This is a lovely album, and an excellent candidate to serve as a primer to those of us who want to compose and produce electronic music. These guys took the "stone knives and bearskins" approach to composition and gave us this. I've heard very little that can measure up from us and our computer driven rubble.

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They Say All Music Guide

Recorded in 1976 — after Brian Eno had proclaimed them one of the best groups around — but for whatever reason not released until 20 years later, Tracks & Traces is a fascinating release not merely for Eno’s participation but for the hints of music that would become mainstream in the future. Indeed, opening cut “Vamos Companeros” has an intense guitar line from Rother that in its nervous, choppy way suggests everything from Wire to Bauhaus, not to mention Eno’s own noted production clients, U2. Having already created two excellent albums, the core Harmonia trio was easily placed to whip up a third, with Eno the wild-card factor who turned out to be a perfect addition. While contributing some lyrics and singing at a time when he was steering away firmly from both in his own solo work, most of the time Eno lets the band speak for itself musically, most notably adding snaky, quietly threatening basslines. Compositions range from the lengthy to just fragments, and while it feels at points more like a collection of sessions than necessarily a complete stand-alone album conceived as such, the end results are still well worth hearing. The contemplative “By the Riverside,” which could easily have turned up on Eno’s Before and After Science (where his related collaboration with Cluster, “By This River,” appeared) is a slow treasure, a core keyboard loop providing the slow-paced rhythm. “Almost” is another killer, with a lead guitar/piano melody that’s pure gentle heartbreak if ever there were such a thing, gently descending and softly surrounded by an elegantly flowing arrangement. If there’s less of the glittering glaze of the earlier Harmonia albums, the explorations in ambient sound and mysterious and murky textures make for a more than fair exchange. – Ned Raggett

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